Budget 101 - August 14, 2015 (.pdf)
Transcript of Budget 101 - August 14, 2015 (.pdf)
NEW DEPARTMENT CHAIR ORIENTATION August 14, 2015
Department of Academic Resources and Planning
California State University,
Northridge
BUDGET 101
Diane S. Stephens
Associate Vice President
Eleanor Jones Director Academic Budget
Management
Agenda
• Introductions • California and CSU Budget Process • CSUN Budget • Fund Accounting Overview • Budgeting in Academic Affairs • Departmental Budgeting & Tools • Terminology and Discussion Throughout
Today’s slides: http://www.csun.edu/academic-resources-planning/budget-presentations
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Budget Terminology
Operating Budget
• An operating budget is a plan of revenue to be generated and expenditures (or transfers) from that revenue over a finite period of time
Budget Process
• A budget process is the method and timeline (or cycle) used by an institution to create its operating budget
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Fiscal Year vs Academic Year vs Calendar Year
Calendar Year
• Starts in January and ends in December Academic Year
• Starts with the beginning of Fall Semester and ends with the end of Spring Semester
Fiscal Year
• A period used for accounting and tax purposes and is the period of time used for budget planning
o State/CSU Fiscal Year is July 1st to June 30th
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CALIFORNIA AND CSU BUDGET PROCESS
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Terminology
Appropriation
• Authorization to spend provided in the State Budget Act, particularly from the General Fund
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The State Appropriation is ~30% of Total Campus Revenue
2014/15
2014/15
State Appropriation
• State and CSU budget process is focused on historical budgeting
• Prior year base budget plus/minus incremental change
• Base Budget = set recurring funding
• Incremental changes are based on enrollment
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Measuring Enrollment
Headcount vs FTES vs Seats
All are terminology used to quantify the number of students enrolled
• Headcount – physical number of students enrolled
• Seats – sum total student enrollment by section
• FTES – Full-time equivalent students is a calculated unit of measure:
Sum total by student: • Undergraduate: Total CCUs divided by 15 • Graduate: Total CCUs divided by 12
FTES is the enrollment measurement used to determine
incremental changes in base funding by State/CSU 9
Budget Challenges
• General Fund budget is based on Chancellor’s Office (CO) FTES target for resident students that they set for our campus
• Our internal planned resident FTES for the year is significantly higher than the CO FTES target for our campus (by 1,912 FTES in 2015/16)
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• Budget Planning starts one year in advance
http://www.calstate.edu/budget/fybudget/2013-2014/documentation/budget-cycle-chart.shtml
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State and CSU Budget Process
CSUN BUDGET
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71% of our Operating Budget is General Fund Revenue
2014/15
2014/15
$-
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
$350
$400
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15Tuition Fee RevenueGeneral Fund Appropriation
in millions
42%
54%
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State Appropriation is a Decreasing Part of our Total General Fund Revenue
General Fund Appropriation
Tuition Fee Revenue
Excludes other fees
The University must use new base and one-time General Funds to support:
• Enrollment growth o Faculty positions o Operating expenses and equipment
• Deferred Maintenance • Capital Planning • Technological Changes & Upgrades • Improvement in Faculty Tenure Density • Retirement and Benefits • Faculty/Staff Equity Increases • Campus Initiatives
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Use of New Base and One-time Funding
• General Funds are allocated to Academic Affairs by the University as:
• Base Funding o Prior-year Base Funding plus incremental increase based on
increase in CO FTES target from prior year
• One-time Funding o FTES funding based on enrollment growth over CO FTES target o Carryforward funds from previous year
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Academic Affairs General Fund Allocation
The funding formula differs between base and one-time funding; there is less funding per FTES for one-time funding.
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Budget Challenges
• Differences between CO FTES target and internal planned FTES has been large in recent years (1,912 in 2015/16)
oResulting in less funding per FTES to Academic Affairs
• Increasing non-resident students (2,310 FTES in 2015/16)
oBrings in more funds to the University, but oCurrent funding formulas do not recognize difference
in support need for these students (i.e. advisement, admissions, etc…)
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71% of our Operating Budget is General Fund Revenue
2014/15
2014/15
Self-supporting Enterprise entities include: • Tseng College of Extended Learning (~$40M revenue) • Housing ($23M) • Parking ($9.5M) • Health Facilities ($242K)
Incorporated Auxiliary entities—501(c)(3) include: • The University Corporation ($18M) • University Student Union ($13M) • Associated Students, Inc. ($7.8M) • North Campus ($626K) • Foundation ($7M)
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Revenue Generated by Our Campus Partners
• The campus receives about $2.2 million per year in Lottery funding which is distributed to both Academic and Student Affairs
• IRA ($1.9M) – Instructionally Related Activities (IRA) provides student fee funding for out-of-class experiences for students integrally related to an instructional course
• Grants & Contracts ($31M) – The total revenue from grants and contracts, most commonly from research activities 20
Lottery, IRA, and Grants & Contracts
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FUND ACCOUNTING OVERVIEW
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Terminology – Fund and Fund Accounting
• Fund Accounting o An accounting system that emphasizes accountability
rather than profitability
• Fund o Self-balancing set of accounts, with identified sources
of income and segregated for specific uses in accordance with laws, regulations, or special restrictions or limitations
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Typical Funds in Academic Departments
• Fees in General Fund (appropriations, allocations, and fee revenue) – 48501
• Campus Quality Fee (CQF) o Course materials - 48520 o Student support - 48521 o Technology – 48522
• State Trust Fund (includes ExL MOU revenues, IRA, etc.) – 496XX, 44XXX, 54xxx, etc.
• Lottery Funds – 48101
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Department Funds held outside University
Auxiliary Funds (separate 501(c)(3) entities) • The University Corporation (TUC) • Foundation
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Fiscal Policies
• California State Ed Code, examples: o Appropriate use of Extended Learning funds o Appropriate use of Lottery funds
• CSU Executive Orders, examples: o Purchasing Policies – processes, contracts, employee
vs. independent contractor o Student Fees – process for establishing new fees o Cash Handling processes o Employee 125% rule
• Bargaining Unit Agreements, examples: o General Salary Increases o New faculty reassigned time
Campus policies and processes ensure we are in compliance and limit audit exposure and risk.
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BUDGETING IN ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
• College Manager of Academic Resources (MAR) • Balanced Budgets • Adherence to policy
http://www.csun.edu/sites/default/files/300-45.pdf
• Meet Planned FTES Targets • Communication and Disclosure
• ERC Recommendations – 1999 o Open budget reporting and consultation process − Resources and allocations for all departments, centers, and
programs o Contingency funds − Maintain − Communicate to department chairs
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Decentralized Model Principles
General Fund Allocation • Prior year base budget • Base budget adjustments
o Increases: new faculty hires (actual salaries), salary increases (GSIs, faculty promotions)
o Decreases: faculty attrition, budget reductions • One-time funding
o Prior-year carryforward o Planned FTES enrollment growth funding (lecturer funding & OE) o Schedule adjustment funding
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Determination of College Budget
Non-General Fund resources • Lottery Allocation – use it or lose it • Extended Learning partnerships
o Central MOUs – Winter, Summer, SAC, Open U o College/Department MOUs (cohort programs) o Carryforward (limited)
• Campus Quality Fee (CQF) – use it or lose it o Course Materials Allocation o Funded proposals (Student Support & Technology)
• Instructionally Related Activities– funded proposals • State Trust Funds
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Determination of College Budget
Auxiliary Resources: • Foundation – outside funds raised (annual fund,
endowments, scholarships) • TUC – grants and contracts
Note: Auxiliary funds will not show on University financial systems (SOLAR).
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Determination of College Budget
Why It’s Important to Track Salary Costs • Academic Affairs—Salaries make up about 88% of
General Fund Expenditures
• Eight Colleges: o Salaries make up 92% of General Fund expenditures overall o Salaries range from 85% to 96% of General Fund expenditures
among the eight colleges
• Salary costs fluctuate—A LOT! o Especially lecturer faculty budgets o One-time enrollment growth funding to departmental planned
FTES targets o Schedule adjustment funding requests for additional increase in
enrollment
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Salaries are 92% of the University’s General Fund Budget
DEPARTMENTAL BUDGETING & TOOLS
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• Effective scheduling
• SOC worksheet
• Monthly reconciliation
• Line item budgeting at departmental level
• External funding
• Contingency planning
• “Wish list”
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Best Practices
Effective use of physical, fiscal, and human resources: • Build schedule to planned FTES target • Effectively deploy tenured and tenure-track faculty in
order to maximize enrollments using “fixed costs” • Monitor/eliminate “low enrolled” sections • Manage space utilization with University growth Request schedule adjustment funding: • College must meet internal projected FTES target to
receive schedule adjustment funding • Shift FTES between departments to meet demands • Request funding when class limit needs to be increased
or new sections added to meet demand • Make requests as early as changes are known
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What CAN we control? The Schedule!
• Both a PLANNING and REPORTING tool for Department Chairs
• Combines data from multiple systems
• Combines in worksheet that allows for: o Scenario-building (“What If…?”) o Determining cost of planned schedule o Analyze use of resources to achieve FTES target and support
program priorities o Modeling new program costs
• Users at multiple levels
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Schedule Of Classes (SOC Worksheet)
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SOC Worksheet = Planning + Priorities
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Prog Code Program Priorities / Categories FTES % Dept. WTU % Dept. FTEF % Dept. PTF Exp % Dept.1 Required Grad. & U.D. Majors Courses 1 3.0% 7 15.2% 0.47 15.8% 8,000$ 17.4%2 Required L.D. Majors Courses 14 31.3% 12 35.7% 0.91 38.1% 5,538$ 12.0%3 Required Service Courses 7 15.7% 4 11.9% 0.26 10.9% 5,962$ 13.0%4 High Priority Elective Courses - Majors 8 17.9% 13 15.2% 0.97 15.1% 12,740$ 27.7%5 Lower Priority Elective Courses - Majors 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0.00 0.0% -$ 0.0%6 G.E. Courses 14 32.1% 7 22.0% 0.48 20.1% 13,746$ 29.9%7 Other . . . 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0.00 0.0% -$ 0.0%
TOTALS 45 43 3.09 45,986$
PROJECTED
Prog Code Program Priorities / Categories1 Required Grad. & U.D. Majors Courses2 Required L.D. Majors Courses3 Required Service Courses4 High Priority Elective Courses - Majors5 Lower Priority Elective Courses - Majors6 G.E. Courses7 Other . . .
TOTALS
Prog Code
ART 100 INTRO ART PROCESS 10180 6 35
ART 100 INTRO ART PROCESS 10181 6 40
ART 100L ART PROCESS LAB 10186 6 35
ART 100L ART PROCESS LAB 10187 6 35
ART 243 INTRO TO TYPE 18097 2 30
ART 244 GRAPHIC DESIGN I 18098 2 20
ART 244 GRAPHIC DESIGN I 18099 2 20
ART 245 GRAPHIC DESIGN I 18100 3 35
ART 250 PHOTOGRAPHY I 18148 4 15
ART 250 PHOTOGRAPHY I 18149 4 25
ART 484 ART ED PORTFOLIO 11304 1 15
ART 484 ART ED PORTFOLIO 11305 1 5
Proj EnrollSubject Catalog Title Class Nbr
SOC Worksheet = Planning + Priorities
• PeopleSoft Tools (SOLAR) o nVision® Management Reports o General Ledger (GL) Inquiry Panels
• Timely review of expenditures
• Reconciliation Workbook o University Financial Analysts (UFA) can provide
training
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Monthly Reconciliation
• Ability to track expenditures against budget by category using existing tools (PeopleSoft) with minimal effort
• Comparison of original plan versus actual at fiscal year-end
• Resources: o http://www.csun.edu/sites/default/files/sf-coa-guide.pdf (See
Chart of Accounts Reference Guide) o Most colleges and areas have a reference guide for most
commonly used chartfield strings
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Line Item Budgeting
• Managing Auxiliary Funds o Grant and contracts o Tracking and processing reimbursed time in timely
manner o Emphasis on growing external funding as State support
declines
• Contingency Funds
• Wish List
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Best Practices - continued
• College Managers of Academic Resources (MAR) o Budget o HR – staff o Technology o Facilities
• Academic Resources and Planning o Diane Stephens – x5929 [email protected] o Eleanor Jones – x6940 [email protected] www.csun.edu/academic-resource-and-planning
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Other resources available
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Discussion and Questions